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Monday, May 25, 2015

The 10 Best World War II Videogames

World War II is one of the most horrifying events in human history.
So naturally those long gruesome years of combat that nearly obliterated
our world have been used as the setting for a lot of awfully fun
videogames. This is a contradiction that we haven’t been asked to think
about in a while, as game developers have generally opted for more
modern military settings in recent years. But that may be about to
change with the release of Wolfenstein: The New Order and Enemy Front, two games that take place in settings either directly lifted from—or inspired by—the battlegrounds of the Second World War.

As we stand at the crest of a potential WWII videogame revival it
seems like a good idea to look back at some of the best entries to this
genre to date. Here is a list of WWII games that portray the war in
various ways, from grim-faced reverence to mindless, barely historical
fun.

10. The Saboteur
Pandemic Studios, 2009The Saboteur’s unlikely hero—Irish racecar driver Sean
Devlin—is a welcome change of pace from the hyper patriotic grunts found
in most WWII games. Loosely based on the story of racer/spy William
Grover-Williams, Sean aids the French Resistance in undermining the
Vichy regime mostly because he’s out for a spot of apolitical revenge
against a local Nazi. As players liberate Paris and the French
countryside from occupation, the grayscale filter that normally overlays
the game’s environments is lifted and color restored. The Saboteur
is not only a lot of fun, it also shows that the Allied victory
sometimes owed as much to partisan resistance as it did to traditional
military campaigning.

9. Velvet Assassin
Replay Studios, 2009Velvet Assassin is clunky and weird but ultimately pretty
great. Its main character is an opium-addicted secret agent (based on
real-life spy Violette Szabo) and its missions are concerned more with
quiet sneaking than frantic gunplay. Yeah, the stealth can be a bit more
frustrating than fun and Violette’s special power—shooting morphine so
she can slow down time and execute enemies in a blood-stained
nightie—makes it hard to take the grim storyline too seriously, but Velvet Assassin is memorable because it’s unique. Just as The Saboteur portrays another side of WWII through its look at citizen uprising, Velvet Assassin offers a good reminder that the war was fought by more than just stoic, uniformed men.

8. Company of Heroes
Relic Entertainment, 2006
Less concerned with marksmanship than tactical smarts, Company of Heroes
is a game about controlling battle on a large scale. Successfully
pulling off a carefully formulated plan makes the player feel like a
master general—even if that player is as chronically inept at real-time
strategy games as I am. Assuming the perspective of an invisible,
god-like troop commander also makes Company of Heroes an
inherently dispassionate look at each bloody fight’s human cost,
allowing the audience to experience the weirdly statistical calculations
that must have run through the minds of Generals Patton or MacArthur.

7. Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad
Tripwire Interactive, 2011
Everyone loves to imagine that they’d be a hero if thrust into a war. Red Orchestra 2
deserves credit for swiftly disabusing players of that notion. Soldiers
go down with a single well-placed shot, gun sights must be dialed in by
hand according to target range and actual, honest-to-god ballistics are
used to determine bullet drop over long distances. The end result of
this dedication to realism is a game where death is swift and constant.
And it turns out that WWII without recharging health and arcade-style
shooting is a grim affair.

6. Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30
Gearbox Software, 2005The Brothers in Arms series isn’t much for narrative originality, but it compensates for its straight-up Band of Brothers
rip-off story with light tactical systems that make players feel like
an actual squad leader. Commanding the same soldiers throughout an
entire campaign makes it an appropriately heavy bummer to lose a fellow
trooper during a hectic firefight, too.

5. Battlefield 1942
EA Digital Illusions CE, 2002
Listen, if you’re going to turn a historical event as profoundly
awful as World War II into a fun game, you might as well dispense with
any pretense of story. Battlefield 1942 is a nightmare—a
never-ending war, interminably fought on hundreds of servers—made into
time-wasting joy. People have been playing this game for longer than the
actual Second World War lasted. That probably means something.

4. Medal of Honor: Frontline
EA LA, 2002Medal of Honor was, at one point in time, Steven Spielberg’s baby. Nowhere is the homage to Saving Private Ryan clearer than in Frontline,
a game that mixes black-and-white archival footage (overlaid, of
course, with melodramatic bugling) and arcade-style Nazi shooting. Its
American soldiers are square-jawed, everyday heroes, dismantling the
German war machine one “cinematic” level at a time. This may just be the
archetypal example of the World War II videogame. And it’s good fun as
long as you don’t think too hard about it.

3. Metro 2033
4A Games, 2010
Neither of the Metro games are set in World War II proper, but
in spirit they belong indelibly to that time. Ukrainian developer 4A
Games set forward a chilling vision of a post-apocalyptic future where
nuclear annihilation reduces Moscow’s population to warring tribes,
living in the city’s subway tunnels. What’s notable is how stuck the
game is in a WWII mentality. The war between fascists and communists
rages on even after the bomb has destroyed the known world. Developed by
Ukrainians and set in Russia, Metro puts forth the dark
suggestion that the political struggles at the heart of the Second World
War—as well as the fallout of its conclusion—will continue unabated,
long into the future. Lately, that seems like a point worth remembering.

2. Call of Duty
Infinity Ward, 2003
Though Call of Duty is most closely associated with
fast-paced, vaguely Middle Eastern-set multiplayer shooting these days,
the first entry to the monolithic series was most notable for its WWII
solo campaign. It doesn’t look like much now, but in 2003 ’s
sound and visual design made it pretty exciting to take part in a
series of historic battles from the later years of the Allied campaign
in Europe. Levels that put players in the boots of badly outfitted,
desperately outgunned Soviet soldiers also provided a level of pathos
that wasn’t always present in other WWII games.

1. Wolfenstein 3D
id Software, 1992Wolfenstein 3D is the big poppa of WWII games, its twisting
brick corridors and “kill kill kill” objectives laying the groundwork
for not just similarly themed experiences, but the entire genre of
first-person shooters. Irreverent, ultraviolent and still surprisingly
fun decades after its release, Wolfenstein 3D is a game design Rosetta Stone for anyone hoping to make sense of the many World War II videogames that followed it.